United States v. Valentine ( 2008 )


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  • 06-5648-cr
    USA v. Valentine
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    _______________________________
    August Term, 2007
    (Argued: April 4, 2008                                                  Decided: August 5, 2008
    Amended: August 18, 2008)
    Docket No. 06-5648-cr
    ______________________________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,
    v.
    LUIS VALENTINE,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _______________________________
    Before:
    CALABRESI and LEVAL, Circuit Judges, and NEVAS, District Judge.*
    _______________________________
    Appeal from an order of the District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Dora
    Irizarry, District Judge) denying defendant Luis Valentine’s motion to suppress evidence seized
    in his apartment after his arrest and from the sentence imposed after Valentine pleaded guilty to
    one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm.
    VACATED and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    *
    The Honorable Alan H. Nevas of the United States District Court for the District of
    Connecticut, sitting by designation.
    _______________________
    COLLEEN P. CASSIDY , Federal Defenders of New York, Inc., Appeals Bureau,
    New York, New York, for Defendant-Appellant.
    EMILY BERGER, Assistant United States Attorney (Daniel A. Spector, Assistant
    United States Attorney, on the brief), for Benton J. Campbell, United States
    Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, New York, New York, for
    Appellee.
    ________________________
    NEVAS, District Judge, sitting by designation:
    Defendant Luis Valentine appeals from the district court’s denial of his motion to
    suppress evidence obtained from his car and his residence. Valentine contends that the district
    court erred in concluding that (1) his arrest and the subsequent search of his car were legal and
    (2) his wife’s consent to search their apartment was voluntary and that the firearms found during
    the search should not be suppressed.1
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.      The Controlled Delivery
    On Friday, October 8, 2004, members of a drug enforcement task force based at John F.
    Kennedy Airport in New York learned that boxes containing a sofa and loveseat had arrived from
    Puerto Rico, and that approximately 50 kilograms of cocaine were hidden inside the furniture.
    The boxes were shipped via FedEx and addressed to Luis Lebron, basement apartment of 377
    Vernon Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. The task force officers, consisting of NYPD officers and
    DEA agents, intercepted the shipment and planned a controlled delivery for the following
    Monday.
    1
    Valentine also challenges a four-level enhancement applied to his criminal offense
    level. Because we remand to the district court for further proceedings relating to the evidence
    supporting his conviction, we do not consider this challenge at this time.
    2
    Because there were no FedEx trucks available for the controlled delivery that Monday,
    DEA Special Agent Christopher Banzer and NYPD Detective Rodney Perez dressed in FedEx
    uniforms, rented a delivery van and put magnetic FedEx signs on its sides. Another group of
    agents and police officers parked an undercover surveillance van across the street from 377
    Vernon, where they recorded video of the location and received audio transmissions from a
    wireless device worn by Det. Perez. Other officers2 were positioned in various locations within a
    few blocks of 377 Vernon.
    As the officers pulled up in the delivery van at approximately 11:47 a.m., they saw
    Valentine getting out of a sedan parked near the building. Valentine walked toward the building
    and said something that Special Agent Banzer interpreted as “Paolo, FedEx, FedEx,”3 and waved
    to a man named Pedro Rodriguez further down the street. Det. Perez asked Valentine if he could
    help unload the heavy boxes and Valentine agreed so long as Det. Perez paid him. Rodriguez
    then approached the officers and Valentine and the group discussed who would sign for the
    delivery. Valentine then went inside 377 Vernon and came out with a man identified only as
    “Angel.” Angel said he would call Lebron to ask him to come home to sign for the delivery.
    Angel called Lebron and gave the phone to Det. Perez. The person on the phone purporting to be
    Lebron stated that he was at work and could not leave, but they should leave the delivery on the
    sidewalk for him. Valentine was not present for the phone call. Ultimately, no one signed for
    the boxes and Det. Perez and Special Agent Banzer went back to their office at JFK without
    making the delivery.4
    2
    We collectively refer to the task force members as “officers.”
    3
    Valentine contends, and the district court concedes, that he may have actually said
    “Viejo,” which means “old man” in Spanish, instead of “Paolo.”
    4
    No one was ever indicted for the 50 kilograms of cocaine contained in the furniture.
    3
    After the delivery van left, several of the officers continued surveilling 377 Vernon.
    Special Agent Robert Yoos, a 20-year veteran of the DEA, watched the apartment building from
    an unmarked police car. NYPD Detective Michael Johnson, with seven years’ experience with
    the police department, continued surveillance from a van across the street. The officers observed
    Valentine going in and out of 377 Vernon and talking with various individuals on the sidewalk.
    At approximately 1:00 p.m., Valentine, dressed in a gray hooded sweatshirt, came out of
    377 Vernon and gestured to other people standing nearby and proceeded to walk up the block.
    Special Agent Yoos and Det. Johnson observed Valentine and the other people enter a vacant lot.
    None of the officers could see what transpired in the lot.5 A few minutes later, Valentine
    reappeared alone at the other end of the block, holding a cup of coffee or some other beverage.
    Valentine walked back to 377 Vernon and later removed his sweatshirt and placed it in his car.
    A supervising agent, who was not on the scene, authorized Valentine’s arrest based on
    information furnished to him by Special Agent Yoos and Det. Johnson. Yoos then told NYPD
    Sergeant Allan Hoehl and NYPD Detective Paul Crockett to move in and arrest Valentine, while
    Special Agent Yoos walked up the street to arrest the other people loitering on the block who had
    entered the vacant lot with Valentine.6
    B.       Valentine’s Arrest
    Valentine had stepped out of his car and was walking toward the trunk area at
    approximately 1:30 p.m. when Sergeant Hoehl and Det. Crockett blocked his car with their
    unmarked police cars. The officers, wearing plainclothes and badges, approached Valentine
    5
    Although Det. Johnson testified that he could see Valentine and the others the entire
    time they were in the lot, the district court found that Det. Johnson could not see what transpired
    there.
    6
    Of the five people arrested that day, only Valentine ultimately was prosecuted.
    4
    from the front and rear of his car and told him they were police officers and that he was under
    arrest. Valentine struggled with the officers, and Det. Johnson and at least two other officers ran
    over to assist in Valentine’s arrest. Sergeant Hoehl stated that because he felt Valentine reach for
    his gun at one point during the scuffle, Sergeant Hoehl hit him on the head with handcuffs to
    subdue him. Once the officers had Valentine handcuffed, they called an ambulance to treat
    Valentine’s resulting head wound.
    After Valentine’s arrest, Det. Johnson searched Valentine’s car and found the gray
    sweatshirt Valentine had been wearing earlier in the day. Inside a pocket of the sweatshirt, he
    found some glassine bags of heroin. No other contraband was found in the car.
    C.      The Search of Valentine’s Apartment
    Special Agent Yoos, parked up the street a few blocks, arrived at 377 Vernon shortly after
    Valentine’s arrest. Special Agent Yoos then called for Sergeant Hoehl and Det. Crockett to
    accompany him to Valentine’s apartment. When they knocked on the door, Valentine’s wife,
    Annette Pena Morales, answered. She appeared as though she had just awakened and looked
    nervous, concerned, but also calm. Special Agent Yoos told Morales that he and the other
    officers were working on a narcotics case and that they had just arrested Valentine. Morales told
    the officers that she lived there with Valentine and their two children. She stated that she had
    been looking out the window and had witnessed Valentine’s arrest.
    Special Agent Yoos then asked Morales if they could come inside to discuss the matter
    further. Morales allowed the officers to enter the apartment. Special Agent Yoos informed her
    that her husband had just been arrested for a very serious narcotics offense. He then asked
    Morales if other people had been in the apartment earlier that day, and Morales said that her
    daughter and her daughter’s boyfriend had visited. Special Agent Yoos asked if other people
    were currently in the apartment, and Morales said no.
    5
    As to what next transpired, Morales’s testimony varies significantly from that of the
    officers.7 According to the officers, Special Agent Yoos asked Morales if any guns or drugs were
    in her apartment and she denied that such items were present. She said that she had been asleep
    until a few moments before Valentine was arrested. Special Agent Yoos then asked her if they
    could search the apartment. Morales agreed, and Special Agent Yoos gave Morales a consent to
    search form. He read the form to Morales and told her that it allowed the officers to search her
    apartment. The consent form provides:
    1.      I have been asked to permit special agents of the Drug Enforcement
    Administration to search 377 Vernon Avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y., apartment
    2.
    2.      I have not been threatened or forced in any way.
    3.      I freely consent to the search.
    Morales signed the form.
    Morales initially denied that there was any contraband in the apartment as the officers
    began to search.8 Special Agent Yoos warned her that if they found a gun that she had not told
    them about, she would be in trouble. Eventually, she told the officers that there was a gun in a
    7
    According to Morales, she gave consent for the officers to search the home, but only to
    look for people, not contraband. She stated that the officers had asked if they could take a look
    inside her apartment because they had seen two men come out of the apartment earlier in the day.
    She gave the officers permission to look around for the two men they mentioned, but she denies
    that she gave them permission to search for anything else.
    In addition, Morales stated that the officers did not present the consent to search form to
    her until after they had discovered the guns in the bedroom. She said that the officers told her
    that if she did not sign it, everything they found would be attributable to her, and if she was
    charged with anything, she would probably lose her children. She stated that she signed the form
    because they had already searched the apartment and she did not think she was able to make them
    leave. After searching her apartment for approximately six hours, the officers instructed her to
    get dressed and then they arrested her. The district court did not credit Morales's testimony to the
    extent it conflicted with the testimony of the officers. See infra p. 9.
    8
    After the officers’ initial entry, two additional officers came to the apartment to assist in
    the search.
    6
    corner closet and two guns in a locked box. Det. Crockett discovered a shotgun inside a
    drawstring bag hanging on a door in the bedroom. In the upper corner of the bedroom closet,
    Det. Crockett found a locked fireproof box. After he found the key and unlocked it, he
    discovered two pistols inside the box. Morales told the officers that the guns belonged to
    Valentine. Det. Crockett also found a few glassine bags of heroin in a bedside table drawer. The
    officers then arrested Morales.
    When the officers later questioned Valentine at their office, he told them that Morales
    was not involved and that he took responsibility for the evidence seized in the apartment.
    D.      Indictment and Motion to Suppress
    A grand jury charged Valentine with one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm
    and one count of possessing heroin with intent to distribute. Valentine filed a motion to suppress
    the evidence relied upon by the grand jury, arguing that law enforcement officers had arrested
    him without probable cause, that the warrantless searches of his car and his apartment were
    tainted by his unlawful arrest, and that his wife did not consent to the search of their apartment.
    The district court held a suppression hearing on Valentine’s motion on September 13 and
    27, 2005. At the hearing, the government presented five witnesses: Special Agents Banzer and
    Yoos, Dets. Johnson and Crockett, and Sergeant Hoehl. Valentine presented Morales as his
    witness.
    The district court denied Valentine’s motion to suppress. Though the district court found
    that Valentine’s actions during the attempted FedEx delivery were too ambiguous to provide
    probable cause for his arrest, the court found that Valentine’s entry into the vacant lot with other
    individuals and reappearance with a beverage a few minutes later was sufficient to provide
    probable cause for the officers to arrest him. The court relied on the testimony of Det. Johnson
    and Special Agent Yoos that, in their experience, Valentine’s actions were consistent with those
    7
    of a narcotics dealer. Specifically, Det. Johnson stated that selling drugs to a group of people
    simultaneously minimized the chances of getting caught, and Valentine’s purchase of a beverage
    afterwards was the way drug dealers typically rid themselves of possibly marked “buy money”
    used by undercover agents. Special Agent Yoos stated that, in his experience, Valentine’s
    actions were consistent with a drug sale. The court explained its finding of probable cause as
    follows:
    While the court agrees with the defense that, standing alone, defendant’s conduct,
    up until the failed controlled delivery, was too ambiguous to give rise to probable
    cause for an arrest, the totality of the circumstances, including defendant’s
    conduct after the delivery attempt, amply supports the court’s conclusion that
    there was probable cause for defendant’s arrest.
    (A.361). The court then concluded that the search of Valentine’s car was incident to his arrest
    and therefore lawful.
    With respect to the search of Valentine’s apartment, the court held that the government’s
    witnesses were credible, and Morales’s testimony was incredible to the extent that it differed
    from that of the officers. The court found that Morales consented to the search and signed the
    consent form before the search began. The court also found that Morales’s consent was given
    freely and that she never objected to the officers’ search.
    Finally, the court found that Valentine’s statements to the officers after his arrest were
    voluntary because Valentine waived his Miranda rights and did not claim that he was forced to
    provide statements to the officers.
    E.      Valentine’s Conditional Guilty Plea and Sentencing
    On February 28, 2006, Valentine pleaded guilty to Count One of the indictment, namely
    being a felon in possession of a firearm, pursuant to a written plea agreement. Although the plea
    agreement contained a provision by which Valentine waived his right to appeal or otherwise
    challenge his conviction or sentence if the district court imposed a term of imprisonment of 120
    8
    months or less, the plea agreement permitted Valentine to appeal the denial of his motion to
    suppress physical evidence.
    Thereafter, the district court sentenced Valentine to 120 months of imprisonment.
    Valentine now brings this appeal.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “On an appeal from a ruling on a motion to suppress, we review a district court's findings
    of historical fact for clear error, but analyze de novo the ultimate determination of such legal
    issues as probable cause . . . ,” United States v. Smith, 
    9 F.3d 1007
    , 1011 (2d Cir. 1993); accord
    Ornelas v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 690
    , 695 n.4 (1996), including whether the exception for a
    search incident to that arrest is applicable, United States v. Gagnon, 
    373 F.3d 230
    , 235 (2d Cir.
    2004).
    III. DISCUSSION
    A.     Valentine’s Arrest Was Not Supported by Probable Cause
    The officers arrested Valentine without a warrant. Such an arrest must be supported by
    probable cause or else it violates the Fourth Amendment. Beck v. Ohio, 
    379 U.S. 89
    , 91 (1964);
    United States v. Fisher, 
    702 F.2d 372
    , 375 (2d Cir. 1983). Valentine argues on appeal that the
    district court incorrectly concluded that his arrest was supported by probable cause. He further
    contends that the physical evidence subsequently found by the officers after his arrest – through
    the search of his car and apartment – were the fruits of that illegal arrest. Thus, the first issue
    raised by his appeal is whether the facts as found by the district court were sufficient to establish
    probable cause to arrest Valentine.
    “Probable cause to arrest a person exists if the law enforcement official, on the basis of
    the totality of the circumstances, has sufficient knowledge or reasonably trustworthy information
    to justify a person of reasonable caution in believing that an offense has been or is being
    9
    committed by the person to be arrested.” United States v. Patrick, 
    899 F.2d 169
    , 171 (2d Cir.
    1990) (citing Brinegar v. United States, 
    338 U.S. 160
    , 175-76 (1949)); Beck, 
    379 U.S. at 91
    .
    While probable cause “requires only a probability or substantial chance of criminal activity, not
    an actual showing of such activity,” mere suspicion is not enough. Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 244 n.13 (1983). In determining whether probable cause exists to arrest a suspect, “[t]he
    experience of a police officer is a factor to be considered . . . but the relevance of the suspect’s
    conduct should be sufficiently articulable that its import can be understood by the average
    reasonably prudent person.” Fisher, 
    702 F.2d at 378
    .
    Based on evidence heard at the suppression hearing, the district court concluded that
    Valentine’s actions prior to the failed controlled delivery did not establish probable cause to
    arrest him. The district court noted that Valentine merely talked to Rodriguez in front of the
    apartment, entered and exited both his car and the apartment building several times, called
    Rodriguez when the undercover officers arrived with the furniture for the controlled delivery, and
    told Det. Perez that he would help carry the furniture if compensated. Relying on Fisher, 
    702 F.2d at 377
    , where we held that probable cause to arrest was not present where the suspect
    emerged from a house in the vicinity of a house under observation by the officers, hesitated and
    then re-entered the house, the district court concluded that Valentine's conduct up to this point
    was too ambiguous to give rise to probable cause to arrest.
    We agree that Valentine's conduct prior to the controlled delivery did not support
    probable cause. The undercover officers had never met Valentine before they arrived for the
    controlled delivery and had no information from which they could conclude that Valentine was
    involved in the sale of narcotics. And while they suspected that Lebron, the intended recipient of
    the delivery, was involved in narcotics trafficking, nothing Valentine had done gave them an
    articulable basis for concluding that Valentine was associated with Lebron. At most, a
    10
    reasonably prudent person could conclude that Valentine was familiar with other residents of the
    apartment building, but not that he was associated with Lebron or anyone else involved in
    criminal activity.
    The district court went further, however, and concluded that Valentine's conduct after the
    failed controlled delivery, coupled with his actions prior to the controlled delivery, gave the
    officers probable cause to believe that he had sold narcotics to a group of unidentified males
    loitering near the apartment building. In particular, the district court relied on the fact that
    Valentine exited his apartment building after changing into a sweatshirt; that he gestured to the
    unidentified men standing outside his apartment building, conversed with them, and walked
    together with them into an adjacent vacant lot through a fence, where the officers could not see
    what took place; that he re-emerged a few minutes later from a different direction, carrying a
    beverage; and that he entered and exited his car. Based on this conduct and the officers’
    interpretation of it – that a dealer, in their experience, would “come down and do everybody at
    once because it was less chance of him getting caught by the police” and then purchase
    something to get rid of the money used by the buyers in case that money was marked – the
    district court found that probable cause existed to arrest Valentine for the sale of narcotics. With
    that conclusion, we respectfully disagree.
    We have previously held that no probable cause exists to arrest where a suspect’s actions
    are too ambiguous to raise more than a generalized suspicion of involvement in criminal activity.
    In United States v. Ceballos, for example, police officers monitoring the residence of a suspected
    drug dealer observed Ceballos, who was not the target of the investigation at that time, drive up
    and park in front of the suspected drug dealer’s home. 
    654 F.2d 177
    , 179 (2d Cir. 1981).
    Ceballos exited a car, glanced around in what an officer described as a “curious manner,” and
    entered the residence empty-handed. 
    Id.
     Five to ten minutes later, Ceballos emerged from the
    11
    residence carrying a small brown paper bag, again looked around, entered the car, and then drove
    away. 
    Id.
     The officers followed Ceballos, pulled him over at a stop light, ordered him out of the
    car with guns drawn, and discovered that the paper bag contained narcotics. 
    Id. at 180-81
    . This
    court concluded that the officers’ seizure of Ceballos was a de facto arrest and that the totality of
    the circumstances did not establish probable cause. 
    Id. at 181, 185
    . In particular, this court
    found that even though the officers, based on their experience, were suspicious that Ceballos had
    purchased narcotics, probable cause required something more than generalized suspicion before
    the officers could have arrested him. 
    Id.
    Like Ceballos, a reasonably prudent person, based on the information known by
    experienced officers, would not believe that Valentine had committed a crime. Lacking any
    information that Valentine was involved in selling narcotics, that he was associated with the
    intended recipient of the narcotics-packed furniture, or that the unidentified men with whom
    Valentine entered the vacant lot had sought to purchase narcotics, the officers concluded that
    Valentine had consummated a drug deal. This inference was based primarily on the fact that he
    called some unidentified men together, disappeared with them through a vacant lot, and re-
    emerged a few minutes later carrying a beverage. Such non-criminal conduct, without more, is
    too ambiguous to support probable cause. While the officers’ experience may have led them to
    suspect Valentine’s social interaction with the men and his decision to purchase a beverage as
    consistent with the actions of drug dealers, they never observed any transaction between
    Valentine and the men. Indeed, the record does not indicate that, prior to the arrest, the officers
    observed any evidence of narcotics trafficking at the apartment building, except for the shipment
    of furniture to another person in a different apartment in the building. Thus, Valentine’s conduct
    could not have generated anything more than a generalized suspicion that he was involved in
    criminal conduct. Such suspicions do not create probable cause to arrest. See, e.g., Wong Sun v.
    12
    United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 479 (1963) (“It is basic that an arrest . . . must stand upon firmer
    ground than mere suspicion.”); compare United States v. Ingrao, 
    897 F.2d 860
    , 863-65 (7th Cir.
    1990) (finding no probable cause where a suspect carried an opaque bag down a gangway
    previously used by a narcotics suspect, looked around while crossing the street, and then drove
    carefully away while frequently looking in his rearview mirror), with United States v. Rosario,
    
    638 F.2d 460
    , 462 (2d Cir. 1980) (finding probable cause where officers observed a plastic bag
    containing a substance which looked like cocaine, which was furtively carried from house to car
    and exhibited to two men for inspection).
    The officers’ interpretation of Valentine’s actions seems to have been largely informed by
    his presence at the surveilled apartment building and his familiarity with other men who knew
    the intended recipient of the FedEx delivery. “[I]n order to find probable cause based on
    association with persons engaging in criminal activity, some additional circumstances from
    which it is reasonable to infer participation in criminal enterprise must be shown.” Ingrao, 
    897 F.2d at 864
     (quotation marks omitted). Nothing in the record linked Valentine to Lebron’s
    suspected narcotics activity or the FedEx delivery, and without more, his presence at the intended
    site of the controlled delivery – which was also his residence – cannot support probable cause. It
    is for these reasons that we disagree with the conclusion of the district court and find that the
    cumulative record is insufficient as a matter of law to “warrant a man of reasonable caution in the
    belief” that Valentine committed a crime. Carroll v. United States, 
    267 U.S. 132
    , 162 (1925).9
    9
    Although we hold that the facts as found by the district court did not give rise to
    probable cause to arrest Valentine, we recognize that Valentine’s conduct may have given the
    officers some grounds for suspicion. We express no view, however, as to whether such suspicion
    was sufficient to stop Valentine under Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     (1968), because the record
    indisputably reveals that the officers arrested Valentine and made no attempt to stop him for
    questioning. As the district court’s findings reveal, two officers, acting under a superior’s
    instructions, approached Valentine, told him that he was under arrest, and ordered him to put his
    hands behind his back. Based on “the degree of intrusion, the amount of force used, and the
    13
    Given that Valentine’s arrest was not supported by probable cause, we also cannot agree
    with the district court’s conclusion that the warrantless search of Valentine's car, wherein the
    narcotics were found, was a valid search incident to arrest under New York v. Belton, 
    453 U.S. 454
    , 460 (1981) (holding that “when a policeman has made a lawful custodial arrest of the
    occupant of an automobile, he may, as a contemporaneous incident of that arrest, search the
    passenger compartment of that automobile”). While police officers may conduct a warrantless
    search of an individual's personal property if the search is incident to a lawful custodial arrest,
    officers lacking probable cause to arrest a suspect necessarily lack probable cause to conduct a
    search incident to that arrest. See id.; United States v. Perea, 
    986 F.2d 633
    , 642-43 (2d Cir.
    1993). Given that the search of Valentine’s car stemmed from an illegal arrest and the
    government has not presented any alternative grounds that would support a finding that the
    officers had probable cause to conduct a warrantless search of Valentine’s vehicle, the evidence
    seized from that search must necessarily be suppressed as the fruit of the poisonous tree. See
    Ingrao, 
    897 F.2d at 866
    .
    This does not end the necessary inquiry. Valentine was convicted, not for the possession
    of narcotics found in the search of his sedan, but for the firearms found in his apartment. The
    record indicates that the illegal arrest and search of the car prompted the officers to search
    Valentine’s apartment with Morales’s consent and to ultimately discover the firearms. However,
    under Brown v. Illinois, 
    422 U.S. 590
     (1975) and its progeny, unless Morales’s consent to search
    the apartment “had become so attenuated as to dissipate the taint” from the illegal acts leading up
    to that search, the firearms found inside the apartment must also be suppressed as the fruit of the
    extent to which appellant's freedom of movement was curtailed,” Ceballos, 654 F.2 at 183,
    nothing about the officers’ conduct indicates that this was a Terry stop. Therefore, to the extent
    that the government argues that the officers only required reasonable suspicion of Valentine’s
    criminal activity to stop him, we reject that argument as unsupported by the record.
    14
    poisonous tree. 
    Id. at 599
     (quotation marks omitted). Because the district court found that
    Valentine’s arrest was lawful, it never considered the question of attenuation. We therefore
    remand for the district court to consider that question.10
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s denial of Valentine’s motion to suppress is
    hereby vacated and remanded with instructions to conduct further proceedings consistent with
    this opinion. Any further appeal from the ruling of the district court, pursuant to this remand,
    shall be referred to this panel of judges.
    10
    On remand, the district court should, if necessary, conduct additional fact finding to
    further develop the record on this issue.
    15